Remote Sask. community gets donated ambulance
Residents of Stanley Mission will soon get help to deliver better healthcare in emergencies.
After a string of cardiac arrest incidents in 2024, a group of healthcare professionals in Stanley Mission got together to look for a better way to transport patients.
“It wasn’t ideal doing CPR, lifesaving measures in the back of a half-ton in the middle of winter or in the back of a small SUV,” said Janet McKenzie, nurse manager with Stanley Mission Health Services.
In the current system, the community safety officer would pick up a nurse and take them to the patient’s location. But when more serious incidents required transport to the nearest hospital in La Ronge, it could be anywhere from 50 to 90 minutes depending on road conditions.
“We collectively kind of came together and we identified that there's a need and a better way to do things,” said police officer and advanced care paramedic Eric Jelinski.
“And so that sort of spearheaded the first responder vehicle project.”
With support from the chief and council, Jelinski went out looking for suitable ambulances.
But they didn’t have a few hundred thousand dollars to spare, so Jelinski had to look for some help from sponsors.
“For Medavie [Health Services West] to step up with this truck, it was just the biggest thing,” said Jelinski, who also got donations from the National Police Federation, the RCMP, Vallen Distribution and the Saskatoon Paramedics Association Local 3270. “The corporate sponsors, to help us decal it and get it mechanically fit, that was perfect. But without the truck, we were nothing.”
Once Jelinski had secured the vehicle, he had to make sure it was roadworthy.
“We went to Kal Tire to get it mechanically outfitted perfectly,” he said. “Cowan Graphics was able to help us with the beautiful decaling.”
The truck will head to Stanley Mission on Wednesday with a few extra supplies like a stretcher.
McKenzie says the team at the clinic in Stanley Mission are excited to finally get the truck and load it with everything else it needs to provide patient care.
“I'm so happy that it's come to fruition,” said McKenzie. “I can't wait to see it tomorrow.”
The finishing touch was the decal on the hood. Instead of ‘ambulance’, McKenzie took to her local Facebook group for help with a more appropriate Cree translation.
“Ahkosiwitâpânâsk,” she said.
Jelinski says the support from the community will have the direct impact of saving lives in Stanley Mission.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Conservatives to push non-confidence motion against Trudeau government
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says his party will put forward a non-confidence motion when Parliament resumes 'at the earliest possible opportunity' with the aim of triggering an early federal election.
'Buy nothing': PSAC wants federal workers to boycott downtown Ottawa businesses
A union representing federal employees is asking its members to bring their own lunch to work, in an apparent retaliation against downtown Ottawa businesses as new return-to-office protocols begin.
Harris's poised performance, Trump's aggression: Experts look at body language in U.S. presidential debate
The highly anticipated debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump was a heated matchup that revealed plenty about their plans for America's future, if elected. Here's what experts who analyzed the exchange had to say.
Carnival cruise ship collides with iceberg
The words 'Titanic moment' are possibly the last thing you want to hear on a boat – but that was the phrase used by one passenger on board the Carnival Spirit cruise ship last week, after the vessel unexpectedly struck an iceberg.
An iconic Winston Churchill photograph, once stolen and replaced with a fake in Ottawa, has been found
Ottawa's Chateau Laurier hotel says authorities have recovered an iconic photograph of Winston Churchill after it was stolen and replaced with a fake nearly three years ago.
'I'm gobsmacked': Reactions to N.B. premier's pledge to halt approval of more safe injection sites
The head of New Brunswick's only safe injection site said she's very concerned after Premier Blaine Higgs pledged to not approve any more safe injection sites and to consult with communities about existing sites, if re-elected.
Justin Timberlake to enter plea to lesser charge in DWI case
Justin Timberlake is expected to enter a plea to a driving while intoxicated charge related to his June arrest in Sag Harbor, N.Y., according to the Suffolk County district attorney’s office.
Parents fight for change after 13-year-old girl dies in B.C. homeless camp
Brianna McDonald's death was caused by a suspected overdose, according to her family. And her grieving parents are urging change so other families don’t have to face what they are going though.
FACT CHECK: A look at the false and misleading claims made during the Trump-Harris debate
In their first and perhaps only debate, former U.S. president Donald Trump and U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris described the state of the country in starkly different terms. As the two traded jabs, some old false and misleading claims emerged along with some new ones.